Category: Carnival

Carnivalesque 42

Welcome to the 42nd edition of Carnivalesque, a summer special for everything early modern. Many thanks for all your nominations!

Research (or, the Holy Grail)

Gavin Robinson has been investigating saddlers’ wills. You might at first think this a dry and narrow subject, but it got more nominations than any other post, and I recommend reading it to find out why. As Gavin notes, early modern wills can tell us a lot about people’s lives and family relationships, not just their property. William Deacon’s will provides us some insight into his marital relations, perhaps: he instructed his executors to make sure that his wife didn’t embezzle anything from his estate. Or there was William Chevall, who left his niece just one shilling because she had got married without his consent. (Bonus links: a few useful resources, 1, 2, 3.)

At Mercurius Politicus, Nick posts a series on The Pamphlet War Between John Taylor and Henry Walker (2, 3, 4, 5), based on a paper presented to the Birkbeck Early Modern Society in July. He examines in detail the two writers, the texts, the readers and the publishers, to illuminate the sophistication and complexity of the pamplet wars of the 1640s.

Politics, religion and war

Well, if it’s the seventeenth century, we’re never far from religion, politics and bloodshed. Executed Today visits Prague’s ‘Day of Blood’. On 21 June 1621 ‘the Habsburg crown took 27 nobles’ heads in Prague’s Old Town Square for attempting to lead Bohemia to independence’; merely the beginning of far more widespread death and destruction, the Bohemian Revolt sparked off what is commonly known as the Thirty Years’ War.

In ‘It is good for me that I have been afflicted’, Dave Noon discusses the assassination of Metacom, aka King Philip, on 12 August 1676 and the brutal war that bears his name. For the English colonists, the war was a test sent by God, and their eventual victory a sign of His blessing. (Bonus link: Mary Rowlandson’s Narrative.)

Gracchii explores and contextualises the Plot against Pepys, at Westminster Wisdom. Between 1679 and 1681 (and perhaps there has never been a more fertile moment in British history for plots and paranoia, accusations and counter-accusations), Samuel Pepys was accused of transmitting secret plans to France and threatened with execution; he survived because he was able to discredit his accuser. (Pepys the blogger.)

K at Musings and Imaginings has been pondering The Book of Martyrs. She notes that many of the authors on Jesuit missions to England in the 16th and early 17th centuries and the Gunpowder Plot are sympathetic towards the Jesuits and concludes that it’s largely to do with the widespread appeal of martyrdom and self-sacrifice.

Debunkers and awkward buggers

David Rundle asks When was the Renaissance? He uses a visit to a recent exhibition on the art of ‘the renaissance’ as a springboard for a thoughtful discussion of the artificial and not entirely helpful academic divide between ‘medieval’ and ‘early modern’, and the need to be aware that ‘Renaissance’ is an invented concept that can obscure as much as it illuminates. ‘In short, it is tidier to have a Renaissance confined to the sixteenth century and certainly less complicated to imagine it was a single phenomenon which manifested itself across Europe. But, in this case, I am on the side of messiness.’

Bill Poser at Language Log argues that it’s wrong to view Sir William Jones (wikipedia entry, if you’ve never heard of him) ‘the discoverer of the Indo-European language family and founder of modern historical linguistics’ for two reasons: he wasn’t the first to recognise a relationship between the languages, and he didn’t use the comparative method. An interesting discussion ensues.

Recreations

John Fea (Religion in American History) is impressed by the integration of religion into the presentation of the living history musem, Colonial Williamsburg. (The museum site.)

At Philobiblon Natalie Bennett posts some reflections on Marlowe, Shakespeare and imagination, after reading History Play: The Lives and Afterlife of Christopher Marlowe, by Rodney Bolt. This sounds entertaining: of all those daft-as-a-brush Shakespeare-wasn’t-really-Shakespeare conspiracy theories, one of my personal favourites is the Marlowe-didn’t-really-die scenario. (To be continued)

Writers and Readers

At Serendipities, Kristine Steenbergh reviews Katherine Craik’s Reading sensations in early modern England (2007), in which the history of reading and the history of the body are sensuously combined. The book argues that ‘reading in early modern England was a bodily, material experience. In its pages, readers can be found licking the sweet juice of stinking books, being tickled with sugared rhetoric, softened or sharpened by words, pricked or pierced by sermons, or stirred and inflamed by poetry’. It was believed that love poetry was effeminising, while warlike words could stir manly courage.

Sarah Werner (Wynken de Worde) compares modern and early modern information overload. The printing press seemed to contemporaries to unleash an overabundance of books in which useful knowledge would be lost; readers responded by developing reading and note-taking strategies to cope with the flood of information.

Roy Booth is investigating an early modern plagiary. A 1652 pamphlet on the ‘Black Monday’ eclipse, attributed to Isabel Yeamans, turns out to be plagiarized from a treatise by Nicholas Culpepper. Moreover, ‘Isabel Yeamans’ didn’t exist until Isabel Fell got married in 1664.

Michael Sisk looks at the fall and rise of metaphysical poetry at Campus Mentis.

Returning to the Shakespeare authorship ‘controversy’, Bardiac discussed this issue in a series of posts: 1, 2, 3 and 4. (Please note: You are very welcome to comment and tell me that I should take your particular Shakespeare pet conspiracy theory seriously. But if you do I will take the piss out of you. Don’t say you weren’t warned.)

Brief notices

Fun and Games! Never mind the Olympics, Bardolph brings us news of the Cotswold Games and ‘the lost sport of erecting castles on little plinthes’. And Edward Vallance reports on the Age of Intrigue, an online RPG based in the Restoration period.

Archaeologists may have found the remains of Shakespeare’s original playhouse in Shoreditch

Tilman Riemenschneider (1460-1531) was a specialist in limewood sculpture, including exquisitely carved altars.

Erly Mdn Txtspk. No, rly.

Bad news for Shakespeare readers: the Arden Shakespeare Controversy.

Well, that will do for today, because I haven’t had lunch yet and I’m hungry. I hope you enjoyed it and that you found something here that you haven’t already seen… And if I missed anything you think I should have included, you know where the comment section is, right?

The next early modern edition will be in October and as ever, we need hosts!


Early Modern Carnivalesque

I shall be hosting the next edition of Carnivalesque for all things early modern at this ‘ere blog, on or about 17 August.

Email your nominations to sharon@earlymodernweb.org.uk or use the sparkly new nomination form.


Raw Carnival News

For fans of the History Carnival and Del.icio.us:

You can now nominate posts for the carnival by simply bookmarking and tagging them with historycarnival. They’ll appear on a special Carnival Uncooked page, to be reviewed by the upcoming host.

(This is thanks to an idea suggested to me a very long time ago by, I think, Alun Salt (apparently not) or maybe Jeremy Boggs??? - with apologies for taking so long to take it up that I can’t be sure who it was now. If you were that person, let me know…)


What the smart early modernist should be reading today

The latest Carnivalesque is up at Serendipities, great work by Kristine. I haven’t had much time to peruse the carnival yet, but this list of 250+ killer digital libraries and archives looks like a stunning resource.

It’s the 300th [or 360th, or something] anniversary of a neglected landmark in British democratic history, the Putney Debates of 1647. Yes, it’s all very Grauniad, and Tristram Hunt gets awfully excited about it, but don’t let that put you off.

Alternatively, you could try the official fan website of Charles II


Carnivalesque 30 update

Henrik has posted the latest edition of Carnivalesque at Recent Finds, and for reasons outwith his control, he was unable to include some of the most recent nominations made via the Blog Carnival submissions form. So I’m posting them here as a supplement (with a couple of links I hadn’t got round to sending Henrik).

Van de Venne’s Album posted at Giornale Nuovo

Parish registers: the new novel? posted at Renaissance Lit

The Lost Power Point Slides (Armada Edition) posted at the skwib

August 15: John Metcalf, aka “Blind Jack” (1717-1810) posted at Disability Studies, Temple U.

Martin wants to excavate the Harbour of the Sheaf Kings

From Cardinal Wolsey, some notes on the origins of the Ordnance Survey


Carnivalesque is coming…

Update: Here it is!!

There will be an early modern edition of Carnivalesque at Blogging the Renaissance on Wednesday 20 June. This is the time to start digging up all the great blogging you’ve written or read on the early modern period (history, literature, art, philosophy, etc) in the last two months and send it to Hieronimo your host!

Either email oldhieronimo@bigfoot.com or use the submission form.


Carnivalesque 27 is up

For all your ancient/medieval needs, over at Aardvarchaeology!

Now: the next edition of Carnivalesque is due to be held sometime in June (probably either 16/17th or 23/24th) but currently there’s no host lined up. I’m looking for a keen blogger with interests in the early modern period - named or pseudonymous, academic or non-academic. If you’re interested, check out the homepage for more details and get in touch with me at sharon@earlymodernweb.org.uk.


History Carnival 51

History Carnival ButtonThe 51st History Carnival has been posted at A Don’s Life. It’s a great edition, ranging from the Spartans to the abolition of the slave trade to the madness of Foucault, with some sex thrown in for good measure.

The next Carnival will be hosted by Jeremy Boggs at Clioweb on 1 May. It’ll be our first monthly edition, so do please try not to forget about sending in nominations! Either email jboggsATgmuDOTedu or use the submission form.

And from now on the Carnival has a new homepage and blog for announcements at http://historycarnival.org, with its own RSS feed. You’ll also be able to get Carnival news at the History Carnivals Aggregator (feed). And you can get the Carnival feed in the sidebar on the right. But there will be much less Carnival stuff on this ‘ere blog from now on. (Which means that it’ll either die a death or I’ll be motivated to fill in the gaps with other stuff…)


History Carnival: call for posts and hosts

History Carnival ButtonThe 51st edition of the History Carnival will be hosted by Mary Beard at A Don’s Life on 1 April.

Send nominations for recently published posts about history (a historical topic, reviews of books or resources, reflections on teaching or researching history) the submission form, or email mb127@cam.ac.uk, or use the comments to this post.

HOSTS NEEDED from 1 June onwards!! Email sharon@earlymodernweb.org.uk if you’re interested…


Carnivalesque XXV

Carnivalesque ButtonCarnivalesque XXV is up at Iconoclasm. Lots of ancient/medieval blog goodness.

Carnivalesque needs hosts! The next edition some time around the middle of April will be an early modern edition, and the one after that in May will be for ancient/medieval topics. Email carnivalesque@earlymodernweb.org.uk if you’re interested!


Carnivalesque - last call

Carnivalesque ButtonTroels Myrup is hosting an ancient/medieval edition of Carnivalesque at Iconoclasm on Sunday 25 March. Email troelsmyrup AT gmail.com or use the handy submissions form.

Also, the History Carnivals Aggregator is up and running. Subscribe to the feed to be kept up to date with news of all the history-related blog carnivals!


History Carnival 50

History Carnival ButtonThe very first History Carnival was posted here on 15 January 2005. You might, if you feel so inclined, use that one and what follows here to briefly compare the history blogosphere then and now. Quite a few of the bloggers included in that first edition are still active, although their blogs may have undergone some significant transitions since then; equally, there are a few much-missed absences. (Come back to us, Caleb!) But at the same time there are many great blogs now that weren’t so much as a twinkle in their owners’ eyes at the time.

It’s been an interesting two-and-a-bit years. I like to think, though I have no evidence for this whatsoever, that the History Carnival may have played some role in encouraging all that growth. It has of late been in danger of being overwhelmed. Perhaps in the early days a carnival host could seek (if not achieve) something like comprehensive coverage. Not for a long time now. As I’ve already mentioned, from next month, the frequency of the Carnivals will be monthly and this is likely to encourage a more explicitly selective approach. Which may or may not work: I simply don’t know what the next two years will look like.

But I’m delighted to report that I have a new helper on board, Jeremy Boggs of Clioweb, alongside my long-standing deputy Jonathan Dresner, and we should soon be launching a new-look super-duper website. We have Plans.

But enough about us. Let’s see what you’ve all been up to. (Bonus points if you can spot all the bloggers included today who were also in the 1st edition!)

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A Historian for the American People

The death of Arthur Schlesinger Jr prompted much discussion of his role and influence as a public historian, and whether he belonged to an extinct species. Noteworthy posts included Rebecca Goetz’s tribute; Rachel’s comments; a Cliopatria symposium on A Historian for the People (includes further links), which led to further comments by Rob MacDougall on The Age of Schlesinger 2.0 and by Sam Tanenhaus.

Bonus link: Bush’s Thousand Days

Teaching

More perennial concerns: New Kid on the Hallway worries about whether her marking/grading is too generous in Rates of Inflation, while at The Long Eighteenth there’s a discussion of plagiarism in The plagiarism talk and Plagiarism and the teacher-student relation.

Bonus link: the latest Teaching Carnival

Technology

It’s been a good week for discussion of the positive and negative impacts of digital technology on history. Tim Burke worried about losing the serendipitous qualities of traditional searches in Search as Alchemy. I weighed up the status of digital history and the archives. Matthew Weaver considered the concerns raised as Archives board the bandwidth bandwagon. And Bill Turkel made some more upbeat predictions about what’s Coming Soon: History Appliances.

Bonus link: Robox ‘71

Women’s History Month

As might be expected, quite a few women’s history posts from a personal angle. Natalie Bennett shared some of her favourite women in history in Some women to celebrate, while Bardiac wrote about A woman I’d like to thank - for a very good reason. At Another History Blog, we were introduced to a largely forgotten woman writer, Marian Sims and Reconstruction in SC, while (just making it in from the end of February) Credo rounded off Black History Month with a post on Ida Wells Barnett.

At Walking the Berkshires, Tim Abbott took a searching look at his Ancestors in the Witch Hysteria. Elementary History Teacher acquainted us with President Wilson’s other wife.

Bonus link: the latest Carnival of Feminists

Westward Ho!

As ever, an entire cavalcade of interesting blogging on American history. The OUP blo puts the Scooter Libby verdict in perspective. JL Bell looks at Alexander Cruden, a ‘tormented genius’, and wonders if this was an 18th-century case of Aspergers. Grant Jones questioned an account of 1848. Jennie Weber revealed that she feels sorry for the man who has been viewed as the US’s worst President in James Buchanan and the election of 1856. Rick Shenkman took a look at another President in the LBJ Tapes: Two Revealing Exchanges.

Aphra Behn highlights the psychological effects of war on soldiers in PTSD and the myth of WWII. The Educational Marm tours historic cemeteries.

Caleb Crain explores the relationship between two soldiers in the 1812 War and asks: Queer or Peculiar? And at Southern Pasts, there’s a look at the (perhaps) final chapter in the story of Emmett Till: Case Closed. On a lighter note, Bob reminds us that The Cat in the Hat turns 50! And just a little humour to wind up this section, from Jarod’s Forge comes Leprechauns with Botox: the history of St Patrick’s Day in America.

Bonus link: Ten Years of the Buffyverse

And Eastward Ho!

Brian Ulrich investigates Jerusalem Foundations. Juan Cole offers a Very Basic Reading List on the Middle East. Gracchi explores the history of Tobacco in the Ottoman Empire. Alfa King has a personal perspective on the Anniversary of Mauritius independence.

Sepoy traces the shifting historiography of Quaid-e Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah. KM Lawson considers the run-up to the 1948 election in southern Korea in Getting out the Vote. And, not for the faint-hearted, Orac discusses the Japanese Doctors of Depravity, who carried out ‘experiments’ on prisoners of war during WWII.

Bonus link: the latest Asian History Carnival

A Bit of This and That (or, How the Times Change)

Steve Muhlberger takes a look at The crucial military role of horses 1815, followed up by Brad DeLong, where it set off a vigorous discussion in the comments, in What the horsemen did 1815. Evan Roberts reminds us of When winter would kill you. Phil Harland takes on some of the myths about savage pagans: Golden Rule: do unto others according to the pagans.

Brandon examines some of the difficult issues involved in translating early modern texts in Motifs de Convenance. Gracchi has been reading Hugh Trevor-Roper’s posthumously-published book on the Protestant Doctor: Sir Theodore de Mayerne. Fast forward a few centuries, and we find ourselves with Brett learning about Flying Fortresses.

Bonus link: the latest Bad History Carnival

Museums and material culture

At The Victorian Peeper, Kristan Tetens writes about the South American shrunken heads brought to England by Victorian collectors to wind up giving the Pitt-Rivers Museum a headache. Mary Beard has been visiting an awesome exhibition - unprepossessing on the surface, she compares it to The Roman Crown Jewels.

Jeremy Sandor reports on the ‘Innovation to Invention’ exhibit put together by his public history class: Please Touch, Pick Up, Use, Press, and Pass Around. Bill’s chronicling of the History of the Button brings us 1954 Ford Power Windows. At Strange Maps, we can find The whole world in a cloverleaf. Martin Rundkvist points out that studying the past wouldn’t really be any easier if we had time machines, In defence of archaeology.

I’m not sure, but this might be a first for a History Carnival: not a post, but a series of comments at Making Light, as Abi provided us with a fascinating history of bookbinding in five parts: part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5.

Bonus link: the latest Four Stone Hearth

Upcoming history carnivals

The next Asian History Carnival will be held on 18 March.

The next Carnivalesque will be an ancient/medieval edition on or about 25 March.

The very first Military History Carnival will be on 12 April.

The next History Carnival will be on 1 April and will be hosted by Mary Beard at A Don’s Life: usual submission form.

Well, that’s it, folks! I want to thank everyone who has been part of the History Carnival since it began, by getting involved, hosting, nominating posts and just writing great material for inclusion. Here’s to the next 50!

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UPDATE: one of our Plans is getting underway! Jon Dresner is setting up the History Carnivals Aggregator, a group blog for announcements and news for all the history carnivals. (Subscribe to the Atom feed.)


History Carnival call for nominations

History Carnival ButtonThe 50th History Carnival will be held at this blog on 15 March.

Email your nominations for recently published posts about history (a historical topic, reviews of books or resources, reflections on teaching or researching history) to sharon@earlymodernweb.org.uk, or use the submission form provided by Blog Carnival.


History Carnivals, Good/Bad

History Carnival ButtonHistory Carnival 49 has been posted at History is Elementary. Number 50 will be here on 15 March. I’m debating whether to throw a party.

Meanwhile, the 13th Bad History Carnival has been posted at Rob’s New Old is the New New. Lots of fun!


History Carnival!

History Carnival ButtonThe next History Carnival will be at History is Elementary on 1 March.

Email nominations for recently published posts about history (a historical topic, reviews of books or resources, reflections on teaching or researching history) to historyiselementaryATyahooDOTcom, or use the submission form provided by Blog Carnival.

The History Carnival is not just for academics and entries don’t have to be heavyweight scholarship, but they must uphold basic standards of factual accuracy. If you have any further questions about the criteria for inclusion, check out the Carnival homepage (link above).


Carnivalesque #24

Carnivalesque ButtonIt’s a bumper edition of early modern Carnivalesque!


Carnivalesque - call for nominations

Carnivalesque ButtonThere will be an early modern edition of Carnivalesque this coming weekend (24/25 February) at The Long Eighteenth, hosted by Carrie Shanafelt.

Send nominations of posts about all things (historical, literary, philosophical, artistic, etc) to do with the early modern period (c.1500-1800CE) to carrieshanafelt[at]gmail[dot]com or via the usual convenient submission form.


History Carnival 48

History Carnival ButtonIt’s up at Aardvarchaeology!

The next one will be on 1 March at History is Elementary.

And an announcement:

At present there is one host definitely booked for 1 April, and I’ll probably do the 50th edition on 15 March.

It’s becoming increasingly rare for people to volunteer off their own bat to host the carnival despite regular requests. Most recent hosts are people who I’ve asked to do it. And when carnivals are posted, it’s nearly all the same small group of people linking to them (I keep track of these things).

History blogging is growing rapidly, and there are always great things in the History Carnival editions. There are new specialist history carnivals springing up all the time. But - or perhaps because of all that - the History Carnival doesn’t seem to be arousing as much interest as it used to. I’m suffering a touch of carnival fatigue lately, and I don’t think I’m alone.

So, as of 1 April, the History Carnival will be published only once a month. This will make it easier to get enough hosts and, equally important, will perhaps help to make each edition more of an event rather than a routine.

And if you would like to volunteer to host from 1 May onwards, I’d love to hear from you.


More History Carnival news

History Carnival Button1. Right, you know the drill! The next History Carnival will be hosted on 15 February by Martin at Aardvarchaeology. (I’d like to call this a coup - a history carnival sneaks into the Science Blogs empire! - but this was set up when Martin was still at his old Blogspot site.)

Email nominations for recently published posts about history (a historical topic, reviews of books or resources, reflections on teaching or researching history) to arador[at]algonet[dot]se, or use the submission form provided by Blog Carnival.

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2. Gavin Robinson is planning to set up a Military History Carnival and looking for feedback and suggestions:

Military will be defined as broadly as possible. It includes all levels of armed conflict — there will be no rigid definition of what is and isn’t a war. At the risk of offending latin purists, military will include navies and air forces as well as armies.

Within these limits anything goes. I don’t want any artificial division between academic and non-academic, amateur and professional, or traditional and new. Weapons, tactics, strategy, uniforms, insignia, equipment etc are all interesting and important, and so are relationships between war and society, culture, race, gender, sexuality, disability, and the non-human. Preparations for and aftermaths of wars are as significant as the wars themselves. Representations of war in literature, films, TV, games etc are just as valid objects of study as empirical evidence of reality.

The object is neither to glorify nor condemn war, but to see it as in integral part of history which needs to be better understood.


Black History Carnival

The very first Ourstory Carnival is to be posted on Saturday 24 February (deadline for submissions 22 Feb), at Taking Place, for black, Asian, Latino, indigenous American, etc, histories.

We want you to write the stories that are rarely or never told; stories that have been forgotten; stories that helped define you and us. They can be stories of lesser known figures or actions of the past. They can be stories from your family. The idea is to breakdown the hierarchical approach to history that only shares stories to promote patriotism and pacifism. We want to create an ever-evolving ourstory of what makes us who we are. A collective ourstory that informs the present and reminds us that each and every one of us are responsible for how ourstory will be told in the future.

There is a Blog Carnival submission form.